Pump.fun introduced ‘GO’ last week as a bounty marketplace where users can pay strangers in crypto to do almost anything. Within days, one of those bounties turned into a bizarre dispute over a forehead tattoo, a misspelled meme coin ticker, and a blocked 40 $SOL payout.
Arivu, a man from Tamil Nadu, India, permanently tattooed the ticker exactly as written in the bounty prompt. Only afterward did he learn the post contained a typo.
The mistake could have cost him the reward. Instead, Solana traders launched a token in his name and turned the failed payout into a five-figure payday.
Forehead Tattoo Bounty Sparks Spelling Fight
Pump.fun opened its GO marketplace on June 4, and the platform immediately drew backlash over extreme listings.
One bounty offered 40 $SOL to anyone willing to tattoo “$boutywork” on their forehead.
Arivu accepted the challenge. He filmed the full process at a local tattoo shop, including visible bleeding, and submitted the video as proof on June 6.
However, the payout stalled at one point. Critics argued the listing contained a typo and that the intended ticker was “$Bountywork” with an “n”.
Arivu countered that he had inked the exact text in the prompt.
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Traders Turn the Typo Into a Token
Rather than wait for a ruling, Solana traders launched BOUTYWORK on Pump.fun with Arivu’s selfie as its logo. The coin reached a market cap of $373,000 within hours.
Creator fees routed to Arivu totaled roughly $15,000, with estimated hauls around $17,500, while the unpaid bounty is worth about $2,585, with $SOL at $64.62.
— Param (@Param_eth) June 7, 2026Indian man earns $17,500 tattooing memecoin ticker on forehead 🇮🇳
– A bounty offered 40 $SOL to anyone willing to tattoo "$boutywork" on their forehead
– Arivu, a middle aged man from Tamil Nadu, accepted the challenge
– He went to a local tattoo shop and permanently tattooed… pic.twitter.com/AN7xeqbr3b
The incident deepens the questions about moderation raised during Pump.fun’s pivot toward utility tokens. It also lands as the platform faces scrutiny over PUMP’s valuation and runs a $350 million buyback campaign.
Whether the original 40 $SOL bounty ever pays out now sits with Pump.fun’s moderators. Their decision on the typo may set the template for every subsequent disputed GO submission.
u.today